Nathaniel Ross Kelly, Real Clear Defense/War Is Boring: The Bloodiest Conflict No One is Talking About
The culture of impunity in South Sudan — the world’s youngest nation — has spawned a civil war with no official body count. While government forces and rebels kill, rape and terrorize civilians, the United Nations refuses to estimate the death toll and ignores sites of mass burials.
Forgotten among the carnage is a new generation of trauma victims, waiting for peace and justice or, at the least, a time and a place to mourn the ones they’ve lost.
This is part one of a four-part series.
Okot made his hand into a fist and watched his blood flowing out from the needle in his vein.
His eyes were usually filled with a kind of serene curiosity — a warmth and intelligence that told you he had a question, an observation or a joke on the tip of his tongue. Now they were derelict. Almost every part of his face — the wide, flat cheekbones, the sealed lips, the rigid jawline — gave the impression of composure, but his eyes betrayed how hard he was trying to hold himself together.
WNU Editor: What is also becoming more worrisome is that this conflict is setting the groundwork for a major new famine (see above video).
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